Adult Children Mock Dad’s Stickers, Refuse To Cover Cost Of Ruined Shampoo

Household boundaries can get blurry when grown kids still live at home. Respecting other people’s belongings should be simple, yet somehow it becomes complicated when convenience gets in the way.

After one too many ruined bottles of prescription shampoo, this parent decided subtle reminders were not enough. Their new strategy was loud, visible, and impossible to ignore.

Now their children feel publicly embarrassed and are accusing them of going too far. Scroll down to find out how a bathroom mishap escalated into a family standoff.

A parent labels every bottle in the house after adult kids waste $80 worth of shampoo

Adult Children Mock Dad’s Stickers, Refuse To Cover Cost Of Ruined Shampoo
not actual the photo

'AITA for labeling all the bottles in the house because my adult children are idiots?'

I have two of my children living with me. One has graduated from college, and the other is a junior.

I have to purchase medicated shampoo because of a scalp condition.

It is by prescription, and it is expensive. It also comes in packaging that is meant to be stored upright.

Not on its side and definitely not upside down.

My daughter has her hair products in the shower, and I do not touch them.

My son also keeps his AXE body wash/shampoo/conditioner/woman repellent in the shower.

I also do not touch it since I have zero desire to smell like a high school locker room.

I keep my shampoo in there as well since it is my house, and I can keep my s__t wherever I want.

For some reason the two of them cannot understand that not all packaging is meant to be upside down.

They have already wasted an entire bottle of my shampoo by storing it upside down after they touched it for some reason.

It all dripped out the spout, which is not engineered for that.

I talked to both of them, and I explained that they should not touch my stuff and that if they accidentally

tip over my shampoo, it was meant to be stored with the lid at the top.

I came home last week to find my shampoo leaking out of the bottle again. UPSIDE DOWN.

I ordered 500 stickers that say "this side up" with an arrow pointing upwards

when the words are upright, and I put them on everything in the house that might leak.

with my shampoo being literally covered in them...

They had friends over last weekend, and they noticed that the relish, ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, etc., were all labeled.

My kids were embarrassed when they explained why.

They think I am an a__hole for putting labels on everything since they only f__k with my shampoo.

Since it is $80 a bottle, I said I would take off all the labels if they agree to pay for my shampoo. Thus far they have declined.

When adult children continue living at home, even small conflicts like misplaced belongings or ignored requests can quickly snowball into deeper resentment. Experts say the root issue usually isn’t about the object itself but about boundaries, roles, and mutual respect.

According to Psychology Today, setting “win-win” boundaries with adult children requires clarity and collaboration rather than control. The article explains that many parents struggle with the emotional shift from authority figure to cohabiting adult partner.

When children grow up but remain in the family home, expectations often stay unspoken. Parents may assume common courtesy; adult children may assume flexibility. That mismatch creates friction.

The key, experts suggest, is to communicate limits clearly while maintaining dignity on both sides. Boundaries are not punishments; they are guidelines for how people want to be treated.

The article emphasizes that boundaries work best when they are specific and actionable. Instead of vague frustrations (“Be more responsible”), experts recommend concrete expectations (“Please store this item upright and do not use it”). Clear requests reduce defensiveness because they remove guesswork.

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It also encourages parents to avoid sarcasm or passive-aggressive reactions, as these can escalate tension. However, the piece acknowledges that humor, when not hostile, can sometimes soften serious conversations, especially in families where direct confrontation feels heavy.

Meanwhile, Verywell Mind highlights that resentment often builds when parents feel their efforts or property are being disregarded. Their experts explain that adult children living at home should understand that shared space requires shared accountability.

The article stresses that boundaries protect relationships rather than damage them. When expectations are consistently ignored, frustration can morph into larger emotional distance. Setting limits early prevents that build-up.

Verywell Mind also notes that financial factors complicate modern family dynamics. With rising living costs, many young adults remain at home longer than previous generations. While this arrangement can provide support, it also blurs independence lines.

Experts suggest discussing financial, emotional, and practical responsibilities openly. Respect for personal belongings, contribution to household costs, and mutual courtesy are common discussion points.

Both sources agree on one central idea: boundaries are healthiest when paired with consequences that are proportionate and clearly communicated. Consequences don’t have to be harsh; they simply need to reinforce the boundary.

Whether that’s asking for reimbursement, restricting access, or using visible reminders, the action should connect logically to the issue.

Ultimately, the message from both articles is consistent: boundaries are not about control; they are about preserving respect. When adult children and parents redefine their relationship with transparency and fairness, small household conflicts are far less likely to turn into long-term resentment.

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Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These Redditors cheered the humor and called the labels hilarious

Tessa_Kamoda − NTA. AXE body wash/shampoo/conditioner/woman repellent. Thanks for the laugh; I needed it.

Grand-Corner1030 − NTA. That's awesome and hilarious.

It's a genius solution to a problem; thank you for making me smile.

AdOne8433 − NTA. And with 500 stickers you could have a lot of fun.

Let your imagination run wild with absurd or inappropriate places to put them.

descentbecomesafall − That's peak-level parenting right there. Embarrass the crap out of them. NTA.

[Reddit User] − AXE body wash/shampoo/conditioner/woman repellent I was repelled just reading that!

NTA and what a hilarious way to deal with your kids. I hope they appreciate that their dad's a comedian.

Sierrasmom01 − My daughter used to tell me her high school football team "smelled like Axe and failure." She was not wrong.

[Reddit User] − NTA and I applaud your commitment to pettiness

These commenters backed the labels as fair and reasonable consequences

International_Set522 − NTA. My kids are the same way. Your kids can either learn to leave your stuff alone or put it back

the way it was, pay for your medication, or deal with the labels. There are several reasonable choices there.

SlippySloppyToad − Petty but NTA and also economical. Buying in bulk makes sense; it's cheaper and has less overhead.

As for your kids, they need to respect your stuff. If a bunch of labels helps with that, then well done.

C_Majuscula − NTA. Prescription shampoo is expensive, and it's not like it's easy to get when the refills run out.

They should be repaying you for the wasted shampoo and extra doctor visit.

Correct_Nose7842 − I think NTA; they’re both too old to be doing stuff like that, honestly.

That’s the sort of disregard I would show for my parents’ stuff when I was like, 13 maybe?

Your measures were extreme but if the embarrassment is enough to make them change their ways, I say fair game.

Potato_and_feta − NTA There's nothing wrong with being organized, especially when other people are careless

These Redditors supported escalation and repayment for wasted shampoo

Sweetcilantro − nta ​ You gave them a chance, you told them why, and they still did it. ​

Sometimes embarrassment is needed. And this was only in your house, so it's not like you forced their friends to see it.

Effective-Several − NTA. They actually admitted to screwing around with your shampoo? They know what they’re doing.

If you’re buying anything for them, stop till they pay you back FOR EVERY SINGLE BOTTLE they wasted.

And if they don’t, tell them you’ll come up with something creative that they will regret.

EDOT: Just thought of something. Presumably your shampoo bottle states that it should be upright.

Stage 2 would be to buy a bunch of blank labels and mark things like DOOR, FRIDGE, OVEN, etc, Really simple words.

And the explanation would be that since your kids are having issues READING, you are just trying to help them

increase their reading comprehension. They thought the first set of labels was bad…. .

This commenter joked the parent has reached fed-up parenting stage

wheres_the_revolt − NTA but it does sound like you’re at the ”how can I love you if you won’t go away” stage of your relationship with your kids lol

What started as a leaky shampoo bottle turned into a full-blown sticker saga and a lesson in boundaries. The dad’s move was dramatic, yes. But it was also oddly controlled. Instead of shouting, he used arrows. Instead of fighting, he created a visual reminder that screamed, “Please respect my stuff.”

Was it over-the-top? Maybe. But when an $80 prescription bottle keeps draining itself, arrows might be cheaper than therapy.

Do you think his sticker strategy was justified, or did he go too far? If you were living at home as an adult, would you laugh or flip the ketchup out of spite? Share your hot takes below!

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